The Weimar Republic
Jan 03, 2016
The Weimar Republic
Overview
• The Weimar era reflected faults of Versailles and the “Roaring Twenties”
• Plagued by national angst over Treaty of Versailles
• Experienced economic collapse, recovery, and second collapse, leading to Great Depression and Hitler
• Constitutional weaknesses allowed Hitler to seize power
Left to Right, Prime Minister David Lloyd George of the United Kingdom, Vittorio Orlando of Italy, Prime Minister
Georges Clemenceau of France, and President Woodrow Wilson of the United States of America
Review Versailles’s Impact on Germany
• Loss of territory: Alsace-Lorraine, Poland
• Clause 231: blame for war, along with allies
• Reparations: $5B per year in gold until final bill set in 1921
• Demilitarized Rhineland; allies to occupy area until 1935
• France to mine Ruhr for 15 years
• Military dramatically reduced to defensive use Europe, at 1919, with stripes showing territory lost by
Germany and Russia
1919-1923 Initial Collapse
• 1921: Allies set reparations at 132B gold marks; Germany agreed under threat of invasion
• Germany refused cooperation with France in Ruhr: government paid idle workers
• Government borrowed heavily, and printed paper marks to repay bonds
• Rampant inflation struck middle and lower classes
Burning Marks, Cheaper than Wood
1923 Gustav Stresemann
• Chancellor Aug-Nov 1923
• Abandoned passive resistance in Ruhr; cooperated with France to avoid ruinous government spending
• Hjalmar Schacht, financial minister, helped create new stable currency
• Stresemann became foreign minister, and renegotiated reparations and border disputes
Stresemann (center right) with Chamberlain (at table)
Initial Rise of Adolph Hitler
• Young decorated veteran of WW1, miraculously survived dangerous missions
• Attracted to scapegoat politics that explained Germany’s war failure and “betrayal” at Versailles
• In Munich, joined tiny new National Socialist German Workers’ Party “Nazis”
• Redefined “socialism” to equate to anti-communist nationalism
• 1923: failed “Beer Hall Putsch” in Munich: jailed and wrote Mein Kampf
Nazi poster of 1924, showing Jewish banker atop Germany
Adjustments to Versailles• Reparations were rescheduled
twice:– 1924 Dawes Plan lowered
payments and tied them to Germany economic growth; gave allies some control over German economy
– 1929 Young Plan reduced payments, limited time, removed Germany from outside control
– Lausanne Treaty 1932 ended reparations
• Locarno Treaty (1925)– Germany and France agreed upon
Versailles border– France to withdraw troops by 1930– Germany admitted to League of
Nations– UK and Italy to intervene in case of
attack on border or remilitarization of Rhineland
Cartoon by David Low showing Aristide Briand, Austin Chamberlainand Gustav Stresemann signing the Locarno Treaty (1925)
Coming Economic Storm
• Mid-1920s: prosperity, American loans, economic growth
• Late 1920s: rising productivity but not rising demand:
– Fewer workers needed; unemployment rose
– Agricultural prices fell; rural unrest grew
• US stock market rise slowed loans to Germany, as money flowed to stocks Unemployed 1930